Shot dead in Kulgam
By Daanish Bin Nabi
Published by Newslaundary on July 11, 2018
A 15-year-old girl who the Army says was not a stone-thrower
was shot dead by them. Her family wants some answers.
Just two days ago, 15-year-old Andleeb sat for her term-end
examinations. Today, she is dead. Shot down by bullets fired by Army patrol
officers. She was not a stone-thrower. She was a student, trying to get an
education, in Hawoora village in Kulgam, Kashmir.
“Andleeb’s results are yet unannounced, she wrote her exams
just two days back,” her inconsolable father Ali Muhammad Elahi, a farmer by
profession says. A day ahead of her killing, Elahi had told Andleeb to get her
name on her last year’s marks certificate corrected.
“I never knew she will not survive another day,” he says.
Born on April 3, 2003, Andleeb was a student at Akbarabad
Middle School Hawoora where she moved after passing her primary classes from
Mustafa Memorial Institution, Hawoora. Andleeb is the youngest of three
siblings. Her two older sisters, Ruhi Jan (22) and Khusboo Jan (18) studied
with her in the same school. “A class topper, she was also regular at the local
Darasgah (seminary) and memorised parts of the holy Quran by heart, and
persuaded friends to attend the seminary too,” Elahi says.
According to the Andleeb’s family, a stone-throwing incident
had taken place at Asthan Mohalla, around a kilometre from Hawoora.
“Our village youth did not throw even a single stone at the
Army, but when they reached our village, they took out the anger of
stone-throwers of Asthan Mohalla on our village youth by killing three,” Elahi
says about the killing of his daughter Andleeb, her cousin Shakir Ahmed (22)
and Irshad Majid (21) on July 7, 2018. The shooting happened outside Andleeb
and Shakir’s home. It has been reported that Irshad Majid, was a labourer
working outside their home who was shot by the Army patrol officers.
However, Army spokesman RK Pandey says, “When our Area
Domination Patrol (ADP) came under stone-throwing, we fired bullets in
self-defence.” Explaining how three civilians were killed in Army firing, he
says, “It was a normal domination patrol of three to four vehicles led by an
Army officer and there was no specific information about militants when a crowd
of around 400 to 500 people started throwing stones at our men, some of whom
were injured.”
Pandey says the Army fired only a few rounds of bullets only
because they were provoked.
“The Army doesn’t open fire unless provoked but if a crowd
of 200 throws stones at you, then you are in a precarious situation,” he says,
terming the civilian killings at the hands of Army a “one-sided story”. He also
states that the Jammu and Kashmir Police have ordered an inquiry into the incident
and that people should wait for the findings.
“The girl was not part of the stone-throwers, but we have to
say that the Army fired in self-defence,” he says.
Today, Hawoora village is in a state of mourning while a
complete shutdown was observed for the fourth straight day. As hundreds
thronged the house of Andleeb, Elahi was sitting inside a large tent where he
was receiving people coming for condolences. Andleeb was the maternal cousin of
Shakir, the first one of the three to fall to the Army’s bullets.
“When the Army directly fired at Shakir, just outside our
house, Andleeb with other friends and two of her sisters came running out her
house to give water to the fallen Shakir - but the Army fired at her directly
and shot her in the thigh,” Elahi says.
According to the family, while Andleeb lay bleeding for over
20 minutes, the Army refused to allow anyone to go near her body and kept
firing over her body. They say it was only after the Army left the spot, that
some locals took Andleeb on foot up to Mushipora Bridge from where she was
taken on a scooter to Primary Health Centre (PHC) Frisal.
“During the 45-minute commute, she lost a lot of blood,”
Elahi says. “Had the school not been closed, she would never have returned home
and never left us alone,” he says.
The family members claim that it was the Charlie Company of
the Army who shot at and killed Andleeb and two other youngsters. “Apart from
killing the three, they also ransacked Andleeb’s house,” Elahi claims.
Draped in a green flag with thousands of mourners attending
her funeral prayers, Andleeb was laid to rest at her ancestral graveyard in
Hawoora, just a few hundred meters from her school and home. The family will
now wait for the inquiry into the shooting – and mourn the death of two of their
children.